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The dry tank: development and disuse of water management infrastructure in the Anuradhapura hinterland,Sri Lanka
Authors:K Gilliland  IA Simpson  WP Adderley  CI Burbidge  AJ Cresswell  DCW Sanderson  RAE Coningham  M Manuel  K Strickland  P Gunawardhana  G Adikari
Institution:1. Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Stirling, Cottrell Building, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland, UK;2. Scottish Universities Environment Research Centre, Rankine Avenue, Scottish Enterprise Technology Park, East Kilbride G75 0QF, Scotland, UK;3. Department of Archaeology, Durham University, Durham DH1 3HP, UK;4. Department of Archaeology, University of Kelaniya, Kelaniya 11600, Sri Lanka;5. Central Cultural Fund, Ministry of Culture and the Arts, Government of Sri Lanka, 212/1, Bullers Road, Colombo 07, Sri Lanka
Abstract:We identify and offer new explanations of change in water management infrastructure in the semi-arid urban hinterland of Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka between ca. 400 BC and AD 1800. Field stratigraphies and micromorphological analyses demonstrate that a complex water storage infrastructure was superimposed over time on intermittently occupied and cultivated naturally wetter areas, with some attempts in drier locations. Our chronological framework, based on optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) measurement, indicates that this infrastructure commenced sometime between 400 and 200 BC, continued after Anuradhapura reached its maximum extent, and largely went into disuse between AD 1100 and 1200. While the water management infrastructure was eventually abandoned, it was succeeded by small-scale subsistence cultivation as the primary activity on the landscape. Our findings have broader resonance with current debates on the timing of introduced ‘cultural packages’ together with their social and environmental impacts, production and symbolism in construction activities, persistent stresses and high magnitude disturbances in ‘collapse’, and the notion of post ‘collapse’ landscapes associated with the management of uncertain but essential resources in semi-arid environments.
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